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A Call For Reformation in the
Contemporary
Christian Music Industry --Steven John Camp
Christian Music Recording Artist
Those of us who are privileged to represent our Lord Jesus Christ in the arts
should be galvanized by mission, not by ambition; by mandate, not by accolades;
by love for the Master, not by the allurements of this world.
Out of love and zeal for Biblical truth and the desire to bring it to light,
I come to you, brethren, burdened and broken over the current state of Christian
music. I come--not out of a heart of condemnation, but out of convictions
immersed in tears as one in desperate need daily of our Lord's grace to be
conformed to His image. I come aware of the depravity from which I have been
saved and that my heart, apart from the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, is
desperately wicked and eternally sick. Early in my own musical journey I wrote
songs that neither represented good music or precise theology. My motives were
vitiated; my actions were not godly; and my lips were unclean. The thirst for
prominence and position made my heart prideful, judgmental and callused. But the
Lord, out of His infinite grace and otherworldly love, broke me with His
chastening hand to bring true repentance in my own life--and it's that life of
repentance, which is my greatest desire and my greatest failing. It is out of
the crucible of those experiences that I am driven to speak with conviction on
these issues.
This document is a call to Reformation-a clarion call to recover Biblical
Christianity in the arts. Music is a powerful tool from the Lord Jesus to His
church intended for worship, praise, encouragement, edification, evangelism,
teaching, admonishing. And exhorting God's people to holiness--with always our
chief aim "to glorify God and worship Him forever." But beloved, the serpentine
foe of compromise has invaded the camp through years of specious living, skewed
doctrine and most recently secular ownership of Christian music ministries.
While I assert this, I recognize that there are godly men and women who love the
Lord that work for these companies and record for these companies, but that's
not the issue here. The crux of the matter is that the overall nature of our
industry has dramatically shifted. The Apostle Paul warns... "It takes only a
little leaven to leaven the whole lump." (1 Corinthians 5:6) When sin is
tolerated it ultimately permeates and corrupts the entire church. What is pure
today will inevitably be polluted tomorrow if we do not "purge out the old
leaven..." (Ibid. 5:7) In the past several years there has been a non-so-subtle
drifting away from Christocentric music to an anthropocentric music. Sadly this
has resulted in various visible manifestations of spiritual sedition-- where
currently, the CCMI finds itself on a slippery slope sliding away at accelerated
speeds from the Savior, the Scriptures and the church.
Contemporary Christian music originally began unashamedly declaring Jesus
Christ as Lord. Within a few years His name was replaced by several generic
titles filtering out the name of God ultimately to the non-specific cognomen,
"Love." This led to a multitude of synonyms: "The Man Upstairs"; "My Higher
Power"; "Our Family Values Expert"; ad nauseam...ad infinitum. This Biblical
illiteracy I've coined as theological ebonics - Biblical language diminished to
cultural unintelligible chatter affirmed as profound, acceptable spiritual
truth. Os Guinness is "spot on" when saying "[we have seen a change] from the
emphasis on 'serving God', to an emphasis on 'serving the self' in serving God."
The object of faith is no longer Christ, but our self-esteem; the goal of faith
is no longer holiness, but our happiness; and the source of our faith is no
longer the Scriptures, but our experience. Christian music currently reflects
this. We are producing a generation of people that "feel" their God, but do not
know their God.
When Martin Luther stood at Wittenberg's Door in the year 1517, he called for
reformation from the recalcitrant Roman Church. Now is our turn, almost five
centuries later, to sound the alarm in our generation. This time, to call the
Christian Music Industry to reformation--back to the supremacy, sufficiency and
Lordship of Jesus Christ. Genuine revival--a fresh return to obedience in
Christ--is surely needed today, but that would be almost impossible given the
current environment of our industry. Why? True revival is marked by repentance;
true repentance brings restitution; true restitution demands that Christian
music be owned and operated only by believers whose aim is the glory of God
consistent with Biblical truth. This means that the current CCMI labels music
return all the money they have received to their respective secular counterparts
that purchased them and divorce alliances with them. The CCMI has gone too far
down the wide road of worldliness and there is not the tenacity of character and
the Biblical courage of heart and mind to do the right thing no matter what the
cost.
These are serious times, brethren, that call for real answers. This is not a
time for duplicitous people, proclaiming a diluted message, from disingenuous
ministries. It is a time for those whose lives are tempered with the steel of
righteousness, girded with the belt of truth, standing firm in the gospel of
peace, raising high their shield of faith, guarded with the helmet of salvation,
to wield the sword of the Spirit with a surgeon's exactitude, praying always
with all prayer and supplication, with all perseverance for all the saints in
the Spirit. (Ephesians 6:10-20)
Will we champion again the manifesto of the Reformers: Sola Fide (by faith
alone); Sola Gratia (by grace alone); Sola Scriptura (on the Word alone); Solus
Christus (because of Christ alone); and Soli Deo Gloria (to the Glory of God
alone)? Do we have the conviction of heart and courage of mind to do what's
just? Do we have the boldness to shout above the roar of the marketplace that
the Emperor has no clothes? Will we leave our careers, our contracts, our
carefully cultivated plans and press releases, our unequally yoked record
companies to serve the Lord again with all our heart, soul, mind and strength?
There is no gray in this--it's a matter of obedience.
Oh brethren, "we have a name to be alive, but we are dead." (Revelation 3:1)
There is no greater love song to proclaim than the once for all sacrifice of
Jesus Christ our Lord at Calvary, but yet others feel content to sing about the
chaff of this world. What the New Testament church wrestled with the least is
what our industry craves the most--money. How dare we think we can play politics
with God, with His truth and with His church. We can't negotiate with sin no
matter what kind of capital is at stake--and that really is the issue here.
Let us "press on, that [we] which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of [us]."
(Philippians 3:12) Let us "lay aside every weight, and the sin that so easily
ensnares us and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us."
(Hebrews 12:1) Let us fall on our faces before our Holy Lord, repent of our sin
and return to our First Love. With lives bathed in His grace, let us provoke one
another to love and good works. With undivided hearts may we leave the
prodigal's pigpen and come back to the Father's house. Let us commit to prayer
and fasting, seeking the Lord's will with a broken, contrite and obedient heart.
Let us return to our churches and to the faithful pastors/elders that shepherd
us-submitting ourselves to their godly leadership. May we be students of His
Word being filled daily with His Spirit. Let us come away from an industry that
has all but abandoned Christ and forge, by God's grace, what it was always meant
to be ... a ministry. Doing His work, His way, according to His Word, by His
Holy Spirit.
Pray on this, Pounding on "Wittenberg's Door", let us come together to make
history- to make Contemporary Christian Music...Christian again.
Yours for the Master's use,
Signed: Steve Camp 2 Corinthians 4:5
Theses
Opening Statement Theses Part
One:To Do All To The Glory Of God Theses Part
Two:The Authority And Sufficiency Of Scripture-The Hymnbook Of Heaven Theses Part
Three:The Character Of Christian Music Theses Part
Four:The Character Of The Christian Musician- Personal Integrity And
Holiness Theses Part
Five:Guarding The Trust- Accountability To The Local Church Theses Part
Six:To Not Be Unequally Yoked With An Unbelieving World Theses Part
Seven:To Be Above Reproach In All Business Activity Theses Part
Eight:Reclaiming Christian Music For Christ
Published at Worship.Com with permission of Steve
Camp, contemporary Christian music recording
artist and author of the 107 theses.
Visit the new
worship.com at www.worship.com
(1997) www.worship.com
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